2004: Qualified Gains against Terror
K. P. S. GILL
President, Institute for Conflict Management
The sum of insurgent and terrorist violence in South Asia - measured in terms of
fatalities - remained roughly constant across the years 2003 and 2004, though
the secular decline that has been witnessed over the past three years was
nominally maintained. According to available data, 6,584 persons lost their
lives to terrorism and insurgency in 2004, as against 6,577 in 2003 (the actual
numbers may, indeed, be higher, since a media clampdown on reportage in areas of
conflict in Bangladesh, Nepal and Pakistan makes information flows from these
countries particularly unreliable).
This apparent statistical 'stability', however, masks radical transformations,
both across the region and in patterns of violence within the countries that
comprise it. Crucially, total fatalities saw a dramatic fall in India, from
4,171 in 2003, down to 2,897 in 2004, with the most significant decline in the
State of Jammu & Kashmir (J&K, 2004: 1810; 2003: 2542). Declines in total
fatalities were also witnessed in the Indian States of Assam (2004: 354; 2003:
505); Tripura (2004: 167; 2003: 295); Meghalaya (2004: 35; 2003: 58); and in the
widespread Left Wing extremism which now registers a presence in as many as 13
States (2004: 259; 2003: 539). Marginal increases were, however, registered in
Manipur (2004: 214; 2003: 198) and in Nagaland (2004: 58; 2003: 37).
It is the 'blowback' in Pakistan and Bangladesh that accounts for the most
significant escalation in the region, and it is developments in these two
countries - as well as largely unrelated events in Nepal - that have ensured
that South Asia remains one of the world's most volatile regions of the world.
In Pakistan, total fatalities in terrorism-related violence rose to 878 in 2004,
from 154 the previous year. Bangladesh saw a rise from 88 to 249 over the same
period. Clearly, states that have sought strategic gains in the terrorist
enterprise are finding the undertaking increasingly unprofitable, though it is
far from clear that they have the power, the capacity or the intent to put the
genie back in the bottle.
As far as Pakistan is concerned, both the North West Frontier Province [NWFP;
the Federally Administrated Tribal Areas (FATA) alone have seen at least 595
killed] and Balochistan (at least 103 killed) have spun progressively out of
control, though sectarian violence has also been high in Sindh; political
disturbances have been noticeable, with a number of persons killed and arrested
in the Northern Areas; and sectarian violence has also penetrated the hitherto
untouched Punjab province, Pakistan's power-centre. The rumblings of a new
source of dissent, the Seraikis of South Punjab, have also been more audible,
and if instability continues to mount in the country, this could well be another
locus of dissident violence and state repression in the foreseeable future.
With both the Maoists (the Communist Party of Nepal - Maoist, CPN-M) and the
state Forces dramatically escalating violence after the breakdown of the
ceasefire and the 'peace negotiations' in August 2003, year 2004 registered an
increase in total fatalities in Nepal as well (2004: 2451; 2003: 2105).
And despite the three year long peace process in Sri Lanka, there are growing
signs of deterioration and apprehensions that the mediated peace may not be
sustainable. As many as 109 persons have been killed under the present
'ceasefire' in 2004 [primarily political assassinations executed by the
Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) and the internecine conflict with the
break-away 'Karuna' faction], as against 59 in 2003 and just 15 in 2002.
The numbers alone, however, do not communicate an accurate picture of the scale
and scope of instability and violence in South Asia. The geographical spread and
extension [MAP] of movements of radical violence - even in theatres where total
fatalities have shown a decline - is among the most disturbing facets of the
situation in this troubled region. As the 'Conflict Map' of South Asia
indicates, perhaps more than half the geographical expanse of this region has,
today, passed over into areas of present or potential insurgent and terrorist
conflict, and the trajectory of the past year has demonstrated a rapid
augmentation of afflicted territories. Crucially, while no area affected by such
extremist movements in 2003 actually 'fell off' the conflict map in 2004 - that
is, no major conflict in the region was 'resolved' - large territories have been
added to the regions of disorder.
Nevertheless, the initiation or persistence of a
number of processes of negotiation with terrorist and insurgent groups through
2004 was responsible for some - though in many cases, possibly temporary -
relief. Circumstances emerging from the qualified Indo-Pak détente have made the
erection of an effective fence along the Line of Control and international
border in J&K possible, and this, along with the increasing difficulty of
maintaining 'deniability' on Pakistan's support to terrorism, has been the
primary factor that has resulted in the very significant declines in fatalities
in J&K. According to the Union Minister for Home Affairs, infiltration in the
State had declined by as much as 60 per cent during the year. Parliamentary
elections were also held in the State between April 20 and May 2004, and were
marred by a campaign of terrorist intimidation and violence to impose a boycott.
A total of 31 persons were killed during the four phases of polling, and there
were as many as 109 incidents of terrorist violence across the State during this
period. Despite the campaign of terror, intended to discredit the elections, a
voter turnout of 35.11 per cent was registered in the State. The Manmohan Singh
Government, which assumed power at the Centre on May 22, 2004, continued efforts
to push forward a dialogue with separatist elements in J&K, but the All Parties
Hurriyat Conference (APHC) and the splinter group headed by hardliner Syed Ali
Shah Geelani, the Tehreek-e-Hurriyat, have refused to come to the table.
Pakistan has also made significant efforts to forge unity between the Hurriyat
factions to strengthen its own position in the dialogue with India, but has also
failed to secure its end.
The peace process in Nagaland in India's Northeast has held out for nearly seven
years now, and the Indian Government is actively seeking the engagement in peace
processes of a number of other insurgent groups in this troubled region. In the
State of Andhra Pradesh - long the heartland of Left Wing extremist (Naxalite)
violence particularly by the erstwhile People's War Group [PWG, or Communist
Party of India - Marxist-Leninist - People's War, now renamed Communist Party of
India-Maoist following its merger with the Maoist Communist Centre (MCC) in
September 2004] - the most significant actors in the insurgency are currently in
negotiations with the State Government. However, the Naxalites continue to
exploit the opportunities of the 'peace' to consolidate and expand their
activities across dramatically wider areas, and have repeatedly reiterated their
commitment to 'armed revolution'.
In Sri Lanka, the 'peace process' survived through its third year, though here,
again, the LTTE has been using the opportunities of the peace to consolidate its
activities. There have been continuous reports of recruitment - both voluntary
and coercive, including the widespread recruitment of children - and training,
arms smuggling, expansion of military bases, as well as a campaign of selective
assassination and violence to confirm the LTTE's position as 'sole
representative' of the Tamil people of Sri Lanka. The peace process, in the
meanwhile, has remained 'frozen' for well over a year now. There is,
nevertheless, a acute sense of relief on the survival of the peace process -
despite its ambiguities - since the years preceding it saw annual fatalities in
the thousands (2001: 1822; March - December 2000: 3791).
By and large, the future of the various peace processes in South Asia will
depend on the relative strengths of the parties in engagement. If the terrorists
are able to widely consolidate their positions and secure an advantage over the
state - as is the case in Sri Lanka - they will be an irresistible temptation to
escalate demands to the point of a breakdown, and a reversion to violence. On
the other hand, if these groups weaken with the passage of time as a result of
both internal and global factors, they will be inclined to use the opportunities
of the peace process to rejoin the 'mainstream' with some negotiated advantages.
Nepal remains the state most vulnerable to the threat of imminent collapse in
the near term, with violence by both the Maoists and the state Forces escalating
substantially. Fatalities increased significantly among civilians (2003: 214;
2004: 380) and Security Forces (2003: 307; 2004: 481), though they remained at
roughly the same level in the 'terrorist' category (2003: 1584; 2004: 1590)
indicating that a degree of fatigue had possibly taken over the Royal Nepalese
Army (RNA) and the Armed Police Force (APF).
The question that remains crucial to the near-term prospects of peace over the
wider South Asian region and its neighbourhood relates to the intentions and
capacities of the two primary state sponsors of terrorism in the region -
Pakistan and Bangladesh. The major conflicts in India - with the exception of
the Naxalite movement, which accounted for just 8.9 per cent of total fatalities
in 2004 - rely directly on support from these States. This is true of the
insurgency in J&K which is directly propped up by the Musharraf regime, and the
multiple insurgencies in India's Northeast, which receive succour from
Bangladesh, as well as from Pakistan's Inter Services Intelligence through
Bangladesh's Directorate General of Forces Intelligence (DGFI).
The enterprise of Islamist extremist terror is, of course, destined to eventual
failure, even as it increasingly targets Muslim populations as well as elements
within its sponsoring states. Nevertheless, the decisions of its current state
sponsors and sympathisers will remain critical in determining how long it will
take to arrive at its predestined termination, and how many lives it will
consume before it does so. It is clear that the state sponsors of Islamist
terrorism in the South Asian region remain, at present and at best, ambivalent
in their attitudes to the activities of the Islamist terrorist enterprise, and
supportive of its ideological presuppositions.
The external environment has been crucial in making such ambivalence and support
possible, even as it will be in creating the potential spaces for wider
terrorist activities. Within factors located outside the immediate region, the
successes or failures of US policy in Iraq will prove pivotal in defining the
future capacities of Islamist terrorism in South Asia. The experience in Iraq
has, over the past year, been a severe disappointment for the US and for various
nation's that have a stake in the success of the Global War on Terrorism, even
as it has been a source of encouragement to Islamist terrorist forces across the
world. These trends have been compounded by the indulgence that has been
extended to Pakistan over the past years, not only in terms of the very
significant and unhampered access to financial and (increasingly) military aid,
but also in the tolerance of its two-faced approach to terrorism and Islamist
extremist mobilisation. Pakistan simply brushed under the carpet the entire
issue of its illegal nuclear proliferation, and the efforts of prominent
national scientists to provide nuclear know-how even to the Al Qaeda, with
President Musharraf shielding and exculpating Abdul Qadeer Khan "the hero of the
country" and its primary proliferator, in February 2004. The much-celebrated 'Madrassah
reforms' and the reform of state-sanctioned text books in the public education
system have also failed comprehensively, and the ideology of jihad continues to
be taught in a majority of educational institutions in the country even today.
Extremist forces in Bangladesh have also flourished under the shadow of the
international community's benign neglect.
There are lessons in all this. Clearly, nations that create terrorist camps and
exploit the instrumentalities of terror for strategic advancement have found
that, eventually, their own people - and the leaders who create these
Frankensteinian monsters - become their targets. A corollary is that these
entities evolve capacities of their own, and do not remain subservient
instruments of their state sponsors in perpetuity. Significantly, while
terrorism can be contained, even defeated, democracies have, by and large, found
it difficult to amass the political will, the resources and the strategies of
response that are necessary if they are to prevail over terror.
Thus, even while we celebrate the decline in violence in some parts of South
Asia, it is necessary to understand that the war is infinitely far from being
won and, indeed, that, aided by general political and military incompetence,
this could - in many cases - easily prove to be the lull before the storm.
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